Griffin v. Parcher
Griffin v. Parcher
Opinion of the Court
The estate of Henry S. Jones having been represented insolvent on the 17th of June, 1857, commissioners of insolvency were appointed, and a commission issued, allowing creditors six months in which to present and prove their claims. On the sixth of January, 1858, the time was extended three months. On the 28th of April, a further extension of four months was allowed.
The present petition for the allowance of further time was filed on the 15th of June, 1859.
There have been but thirteen months, within which the commissioners could have acted upon claims presented for their adjudication, and less than two years from the issuing of the commission had elapsed, when this petition was presented.
The Judge of Probate refused to grant the prayer of the petition and allow further time, on the ground, that the time allowed by law to creditors, to bring in and prove their claims, had expired, and that he could not legally allow any additional time for that purpose.
By B,. S., 1821, c. 51, § 25, the Judge of Probate is empowered to appoint commissioners of insolvency, “ and six months and such further time, not exceeding eighteen months in the whole, shall be allowed by the said Judge to the creditors to bring in and prove their claims; at the end of which limited time such commissioners shall make their report.”
Upon this statute the inquiry arises, whether the time of eighteen months is eighteen months from the issuing of the commission, whether the same be open or not, or whether it means eighteen months while the powers of the commissioners are in full force, and in which claims may be proved. •It is apparent that if the former alternative presents the true construction, the creditors may have much less than the required time, and that such will always be the case if any time intervenes between the termination of one commission and the issuing of another.
By R. S., 1841, c. 109, § 6, “the period of six months after the appointment shall be, in the first instance, allowed for the creditors to present and prove their claims; and, if necessary, an additional time, not exceeding eighteen months in the whole, from, the date of the commission, at the discretion of the Judge, may be allowed for the reception and examination of claims generally, or of any particular claim or claims to be specified in the order of the Judge.”
By this section it appears that, after the expiration of eighteen months “from the date of the commission,” the Judge of Probate was interdicted from further action.
The law stood thus till the revision of 1857, when, by c. 66, § 4, it was enacted, after giving the commissioners power to appoint a, time and place for meeting, that “ six months after their appointment shall be allowed, in the first instance, for the presentment of claims. An additional time, not exceeding in the whole, eighteen months, may be allowed therefor, or for any particular claim or claims specified in the order of the Judge.”
This section is, substantially, coincident with the statute of
The “ additional time, not exceeding in the whole eighteen months,” means time in which the creditors may prove, and the commissioners may act upon the claims to be proved. The creditors, in this case, have not had eighteen months in which their claims could have been proved, nor can they ever have it unless the petition for extension of time be granted. The statute manifestly intends, that eighteen months in the whole should be given to the creditors in which to present their claims. The petitioner is entitled to the allowance of further time, as prayed for.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.